Interesting : D. I felt kinda left out that everyone had something to post,so heres something:
Its not very scary,in fact,it sounds..interestingxD?

Clinton Road.
Clinton Road is just 10 miles long, but the drive can feel never-ending when you're racing to keep ahead of the evil spirits that lurk about. This desolate stretch of road has all of the makings for the classic urban legend -- alleged paranormal activity, satanic rituals and phantom trucks that send drivers on a wild ride. More recently, it was a dumping ground for a mob hit man known as the Iceman. No haunted thoroughfare is complete without a dead man's curve, located about 3 miles into the hair-raising drive. The worst part? There are no exits on this lonesome highway.

Where is Clinton Road at? What state/country?

This post has given me places to look up and find out more about. I love it...always ready to know more about the creepy side of life....or death.....

Its in new jersey...ive been tempted to go there myself as im less then an hour away from it

isn't that where the jersey devil lives? I have a hunch, im wrong.

Well it could live there? they just say the Jersey devil lives in the Pine barrens..and I think that clinton road goes through them..I do know that clinton road is where the mafia would bury bodies of people they took out back in the day...

Prypiat isn't really scarry. As far as I know, no one really died there, right? The place seems barren, which would be interesting to see.

Well, just because no one really died there doesn't mean it's not scary.

I think it does, when your in a creepy house, you wonder, "Oh nooooooooesss, is it haunted" if someone told you, no one has ever lived in this house, been in this house, looked at it, or slept near it, I would feel a lot more at ease. People just left Prypiat, Nothing bad happened, no murder's, no suicides, just everyone left because of the radiation. Not really scary when you compare it to the 'Church of Bones' or the 'Weird Sky-Balloon like hotel's'. I, kinda would find the Suicide forest a little creepy seeming as for all the dead bodies, but that also perks my interest, why did everyone go there to commit suicide. Ritual? Sense of not feeling alone when they pass? Seriously, it's not just coincidence, seeing as the government recognized this and posted signs saying, "Value your lives, think of your family!" it's like a Hot-Spot. Not only that, it's a free-for-all when it comes to looting too, I wouldn't want to be near that if Japanese looter's are vicious.

Aokigahara is a woodland at the base of Mount Fuji in Japan that makes The Blair Witch Project forest look like Winnie the Pooh's Hundred Acre Wood. It probably has something to do with all the dead bodies scattered around.

What Niagara Falls is to weddings, Aokigahara is to suicide. How many suicides does it takes for a place to get that reputation? A dozen? Fifty?

More than 500 fucking people have taken their own lives in Aokigahara since the 1950s.

The trend has supposedly started after Seicho Matsumoto published his novel Kuroi Kaiju (Black Sea of Trees) where two of his characters commit suicide there. After that-always eager to prove they are bizarrely susceptible to suggestion-hundreds of Japanese people have hanged themselves among the countless trees of the Aokigahara forest, which is reportedly so thick that even in high noon it's not hard to find places completely surrounded by darkness.

Also skulls.

Besides bodies and homemade nooses, the area is littered with signs displaying such uplifting messages like "Life is a precious thing! Please reconsider!" or "Think of your family!"

In the 70s, the problem got national attention and the Japanese government began doing annual sweeps of the forest in search of bodies. In 2002, they found 78. But who knows how many they missed? In all likelihood there probably is a hanged person somewhere in Aokigahara on any given day.

By the way, if an entire dark forest full of hanged corpses wasn't bad enough, a few years ago some people noticed that a lot of the dead in Aokigahara probably had cash or jewelry on them. Thus began the proud Japanese tradition of Aokigahara Scavenging where people are running around the Death Forest, looking for dead guys to loot.

#5. The Overtoun Bridge

Spoiler Alert! Click to show or hide

Located near Scotland's charming little village of Milton in the peaceful burgh of Dumbarton, the Overtoun Bridge is a local arch construction where no human beings have ever died in any suspicious circumstances whatsoever over the last few decades.

However, during that span, for reasons we can't begin to possibly understand, hundreds and hundreds of dogs have killed themselves there. It appears that dogs have been plunging off of Overtoun since the early 60s, at a rate of one animal a month... bringing the total number today to around 600 mutts, who for some reason, decided to end it all.

"Please don't make me do something like this again."-Photoshop

And we're not talking about a series of unfortunate accidents that could have been avoided with a simple guard rail. People who actually witnessed the reported dogs willingly climbing the parapet wall and leaping to their doom with dumbass doggy grins on their faces. Whether they were crying blood remains to be confirmed.

Theories on why is this happening have been all over the place, from particularly aromatic rodents to a simple stream of bizarre coincidences. We call bullshit on both seeing as--to paraphrase Ian Fleming--"Once is happenstance, twice is coincidence, three times is enemy action and over 600 is clearly the work of an ancient Sumerian demon or some shit."

"Because, for real, that shit is straight up like eight different kinds of crazy. Shit."

To further drive the point home, it has been observed that certain dogs that jumped off the bridge and survived, fucking climbed back up and THREW THEMSELVES TO THEIR DEATHS ALL OVER AGAIN.

Because the great Overtoun demon's hunger will not be appeased with tries. He demands fresh canine blood, and lots of it.

#4. Winchester Mystery House

Spoiler Alert! Click to show or hide

In San Jose there is this house. It is a gigantic, sprawling 160-room complex designed like a maze, with mile-long hallways, secret passages, dead ends, doors opening to blank walls and staircases leading to the ceiling.

It's the work of Sarah Winchester, heiress to the Winchester rifle fortune. In the late 19th century, deeply saddened over the death of her husband and daughter, she visited a Boston medium who told her she was haunted by the spirits of all the victims of Winchester rifles. She needed to make peace with them by... always be building a house. As in, never stop building a house, or else she will die. What a nice thing to say to someone who has just lost her family. There is no way this could end with Sarah building a real life version of the Addams Family household.

In 1884, Winchester started construction of her new San Jose mansion, which has gone on non-stop for 38 years right until her death. Despite modern contractors taking about that much time to put in the wooden paneling in your kitchen, the Winchester mansion eventually grew so big you could, in all seriousness, get lost in it. And getting lost was the idea, the crazy twists and turns and dead ends were intended to confuse the ghosts. Sarah was kind of a jerk like that.

Oh, bitch...!

But pissing off vengeful spirits was just one of the many architectural choices for the mansion. The entire Winchester Mystery House was decorated with a constant spiderweb motif--which Sarah believed had some spiritual meaning--and everything from the hooks on the walls to candle holders has been arranged around the number 13, supposedly for good luck. Yeah... for someone trying to free herself from ghosts, Winchester did everything but sacrifice a baby goat to Satan to assure her house will be haunted.

#3. The Sedlec Ossuary

Spoiler Alert! Click to show or hide

Remember when we said Aokigahara was the Niagara falls of suicide? Well, for centuries the abbot in the small Czech town of Sedlec has been the Niagara Falls for dead people, regardless of cause of death. Ever since someone sprinkled soil from the Holy Land on the local cemetery in the 13th century, people from all over Europe started demanding to be buried there and the Sedlec graveyard kept growing until 1870, when the priests decided to finally do something about all those surplus bones lying around. Something insane.

Bam! Chandelier full of bones!

Today, the Sedlec Ossuary is a chapel famous for being decorated with tens of thousands of human bones. This macabre style of interior design was the work of Czech woodcarver Frantisek Rint who, for some reason, was hired to organize the church's extensive skeleton collection. The results were huge mounds of human remains in the four corners of the chapel, a terrifying chandelier built from every bone in the human body, and a massive skull coat of arms adorning the entrance.

We realize this is the Czech Republic and all, but it has been 27 years, surely Poltergeist was released out there already. Like, maybe last year or something? Why are they still playing with human bones as if they were Satan's Lego blocks and making them sit through Mass every single day for almost 140 years now? On the Tempting Fate scale, the only thing worse would be to start using some of the skulls as ceremonial mugs or chamber pots.

At this point, does it really surprise anyone that the church became the inspiration for Dr. Satan's lair in the Rob Zombie movie House of 1000 Corpses?

#2. San Zhi Resort

Spoiler Alert! Click to show or hide

What do you get when you cross a series of abandoned, rusting, futuristic UFO-shaped buildings with a series of mysterious deaths covered up by the government? How about the ghost town-slash-tourist resort of San Zhi, located just outside Taipei and inside your worst nightmares.

The exclusive San Zhi resort in Taiwan was supposed to be the destination for bored, rich folk who always wondered what it would be like to live inside an over-sized hockey puck. Construction of Pod City started around the 80s but was quickly shut down after a series of mysterious on-site fatal accidents... or it could have been due to Godzilla attacks for all we know. There is actually very little official information on San Zhi. We can't even confirm how many people died there or if they screamed something about eyeless children eating their souls. The whole thing is shrouded in secrecy.

A hotel? No! This is a... a weather balloon!

Currently, most of the information on the complex comes from the locals who--what a surprise--refuse to go near the damn thing. And thus the abandoned 90 pods just stand there, waiting for anyone foolish enough to wander in.

Come on dude, don't be a pussy, this place looks legit.

Wait a second... abandoned resort town in the middle of nowhere, mysterious deaths, lack of any official information... where have we seen this before?

We also would've accepted "Our nightmares."

#1. Prypiat

Spoiler Alert! Click to show or hide

A whole lot of you just got deja vu looking at the above picture. Specifically, those of you who have played Call of Duty 4, as there is an entire level that takes place there. If you thought the idea of a completely silent, abandoned, radioactive city was typical video game apocalyptic fantasy, you were wrong.

Prypiat is in the northern Ukraine and once housed the workers and scientists of the Chernobyl Nuclear Plant. Founded in the 70s, it held as many as 50,000 people. Then in 1986, according to a footnote in the official Soviet records, there was a small malfunction in the Chernobyl reactor, so for safety reasons the city was evacuated.

Since then, Prypiat has been desolated, its buildings decaying, the giant Ferris Wheel just standing there all alone with nobody to ride it. The city actually had an entire amusement park for the families of the Chernobyl employees. Because when you are living next to a nuclear reactor which was outdated even by 1986 Soviet standards, the only thing on your mind is bumper cars.

The city is located in what is known as the Zone of Alienation, the 30-kilometer radius directly affected by the Chernobyl "minor technical difficulty" over 20 years ago. Despite that, Prypiat is now opened to the public because the radiation levels have apparently went down significantly over the years. We guess we have a different view on radiation than the government of Ukraine. They obviously have a scale for it, while we consider any radiation a very bad thing.

Aside from the inherent risk of getting bit by a radioactive snail and becoming the lamest superhero ever, there is another reason why you will never see us among the tourists occasionally visiting Prypiat.

The fucking nursery. We told you this was a place built for families and wouldn't you know it, they have a nursery, which according to certain claims is currently paved with baby shoes and abandoned dolls. So, Prypiat is basically an abandoned radioactive ghost Soviet baby amusement park.

In 1962, Centralia was a growing community of about 1100 residents. The town sat upon one of the richest veins of anthracite coal in the United States. Now there are 4 people who live there. One of the residents is Lamar Mervine, the town's 86 year old mayor, who recalls how no one took action for four or five months and when they did, it was too little, too late. He is determined to stay in Centralia and tell his story to all who ask.

In the 2006 horror film, "Silent Hill," the town of Silent Hill has been abandoned due to a prolonged mine fire. "This was inspired by Centralia, PA," says the film's director, Christophe Gan.

How it happened taken from: http://www.offroaders.com/album/centralia/study/ESL201Paper.htm
Centralia is located in the anthracite coal region of Eastern Pennsylvania, in Columbia County. In the summer of 1962, a fire started in the Buck Mountain coal bed. At this time, there were about 1,100 residents with 545 families and businesses in Centralia (PDEP, 1996). The mine fire is believed to have started from an accidental fire at the landfill located at the southern end of the town. >From here, the fire spread igniting an open coalmine shaft and spreading throughout the abandoned mines. By 1983, the fire consumed approximately 195 acres of area (Logue and others, 1991), and the main road into town, Route 61, suffered severe subsidence damage (PDEP, 1996). In 1983, the Office of Surface Mining (OSM) was authorized by the Department of Health to reclaim public lands and private establishments deemed hazardous, and over 30 houses were moved away. The OSM released a report in 1983 estimating that the fire could spread to 3,700 acres and "burn for a century or more if left uncontrolled" (Logue and others, 1991). Hazards included subsidence, noxious gases, oxygen depletion, and particulate matter. "A study estimated it would cost $663 million to extinguish what some call "the granddaddy" of all mine fires", says Lynne Glover in the Tribune review. Because the estimated cost of relocation was only about 42 million, relocation was chosen as the answer to the fire. The coal bed will eventually burn out when the coal seem ends, so the neighboring towns are believed to be safe (Glover, 1998). In 1984, Congress set aside $42 million dollars and begins to relocate families and businesses. The Milton S. Hershey Medical Center released a report that concluded Centralians had higher incidences of respiratory disease, hypertension, gastrointestinal disease, arthritis, and depression in Feb. 1986 (Logue and others, 1991). In 1993, Route 61 is closed indefinitely after several attempts to repair it. The 53 remaining households are condemned but the remaining residents still refuse to leave. By 1996, there were <46 remaining residents (< 5% of the original) of Centralia (20 families) and the total costs of relocation exceed $35 million